friends starts right now. good morning, welcome to the second hour of fox & friends. looking there at times square. looking for a ball drop 48, 72 hours. i don t know how many hours until the 31st. 72 hours see ball drop and welcome in 2024 which griff says travis and taylor will be getting married. griff: i m telling you she wouldn t let them be so public and go to so many games if the love wasn t real. by the way real quick did you know right away that that was times square before it said new york city? joey: i didn t have a and which to look at it before you told me. as soon as i knew as soon as you told me i looked up. carley: before the identifier of the city popped on the screen i always try and guess the city. and i have never gotten one right. so producer anthony goes carley, let s see if you can get this one. i did. i knew it was new york city. because it s the city i live. in so if i couldn t get that, then there is no hope for me. griff: billboards
this at this podium. you heard as phil was saying twice from the president talk about this. he said that he didn t know. he said that he was surprised. he said that he takes classified information and documents very seriously. neil: and on and on we go with the questions mounting as the investigation in to the president s classified documents widens including who had access to the documents and when. the republicans are accusing the white house of stone walling. we ll talk to darrell issa of california. first, coverage with jacqui heinrich on what the white house is saying now and how republicans are responding to this now. welcome. i m neil cavuto on a busy news days here and an investigation that is only now just starting and yielding more questions than answers with every passing hour. jacqui heinrich has the very latest. jacqui? hi, neil. we just got out of an event with the president and the golden state warriors. he didn t stop to talk to reporters. at the risk of s
the u.n. estimates more than half of the population needs some form of humanitarian assistance. the world banks say they re at the lowest level in a decade and after promising to respect women s rights, the taliban have banned most girls from going to school past sixth grade. even in the past, there were restrictions and violence but there was hope. we had school. we could have knowledge. now they lost their only hope, which is education. this a somber reminder of how desperate people were a year ago to get out of afghanistan anticipating a taliban takeover. you can see them there clinging to the side of a u.s. military plane taking off from kabul. some afghans tragically fell to their death. the chaotic u.s. exit led to a terrorist attack outside the airport. now republican congressman is out with a report accusing the biden administration of a strategic failure anybody the country. congressman michael mccaul and general jack keane join us in just a moment. but first, we
this state s governor or to at least compete for that pick. you have the current governors brian kemp looking like he with cruise past former senator david perdue. and if georgia s a test of the strengths of the former president s endorsement, then alabama may be a test of what happens when he takes that endorsement away, with mo brooks making a late push for a senate seat. we re also live on the ground in tex. we have you covered with the democratic primarily getting a ton of attention, between a incumbent and a political newcomer backed by some of the biggest names in the progressive movement. blayne alexander and alison barber are joining us, on set, a reporter emma hurt and some key questions from our political experts here, from greg of course, himself. first, if the polls are accurate can brian kemp unify georgia republicans? number two, what does it mean for donald trump? and what does the former president do tomorrow or the day after or the day after? would he suppo
we just got out of an event with the president and the golden state warriors. he didn t stop to talk to reporters. at the risk of sounding too inside baseball here, as reporters in the white house trying to get answers to questions, it s frustrating to have your questions referred to doj or to have the press secretary say, you know, i ve answered this when the question is about an answer that she gave last week that turned out to be incorrected. to have that press conference stacked up against an event that truncates the amount of time that we get to talk to the press secretary. it s not allowed for a huge back and forth. fox didn t get called on today. as well as a number of other people. the press secretary did point to a background call that was held where we should have gotten questions answered but we did not. it was a half hour long. they preselected who they would call on. we didn t get a question in to that. i want to play a sound bite that demonstrates the circular way that th